Word: expression
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Vatican or popes in New York harbours may unfortunately have led people to the opposite erroneous extreme of thinking religion and secular life have no points of contact at all. But the adherent of any religious creed and the set of moral ethics it implies, must naturally strive to express these in his daily life. A believer in the precepts of the Constitution will endeavour to do the same. So the Catholic takes a stand against "birth control, ...the drug traffic and pornography." So "one of the self-defined functions of American government has been the prevention of public immorality...
...only mechanical part of the whole process is the making of two or three legs-or perhaps four: "That's a beast or two people." The titles are an afterthought, for Chadwick's purpose is not to express any idea. "Some people want to say something visually," he says. "But I want my work to be considered for itself. What interests me is the physical result, the form, the object rather than the idea." Then why bother with making legs at all? Answers Chadwick: "One must start from somewhere or else there is chaos. And I couldn...
...finally, the personal conscience, which we Protestants try to derive from the direct access to God and express as the duty of private judgment, is essential to the dialogue...
...stake that the Communists were not prepared to lose. The Russian news agency Tass warned darkly that U.S. "intervention" could lead to "a second Korea." With the Russians supplying one side and the U.S. the other, the possibility was real enough for the U.S. State Department to express "serious concern" about the continuing Russian airdrops of supplies to the Kong Le rebels-while pointing out that U.S. aid was being supplied to the legitimate government...
...tantalizing aspects of the sculpture show that filled the entire Galerie Breteau in Paris last week was that it consisted of only two works. But the two huge sculptures were enough to make bearded little Etienne-Martin, 47, the talk of the Paris galleries. L'Express saw a " 'new wave' of sculpture" and hailed him as "one of the principal inspirers." And the Paris edition of the Herald Tribune said, in critic talk: "His sculpture has the mysterious poetry and ferocity of nature and man at their most elemental." The critics received him so familiarly, in fact...